Gravlee v. Cannon
This text of 70 So. 719 (Gravlee v. Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The amended bill, in which the wife is the sole complainant, seeks the cancellation of an instrument, in form a deed, upon the theory that it was in fact a mortgage on her property to secure the payment of the debt of her husband to the respondent, Murray Cannon. This appeal is from a decree sustaining Cannon’s demurrer; the chancellor expressly resting his ruling upon the fifth ground, which pointed the objection that the averments of the amended bill showed that the wife’s property, described in the amended bill, was conveyed [550]*550by her in full payment and discharge of the husband’s debt to Cannon, and not in security thereof — a conclusion that, under many authorities delivered here, would have been entirely sound if the allegations of the amended bill made a case of that character. This is the case made by the-averments of the amended bill. W. L. Gravlee, complainant’s husband, was, on 23d day of August, 1913, indebted to Cannon, respondent, in the sum of $1,048. Cannon, “being desirous of collecting said sum (from W. L. Gravlee), and finding that ‘Gravlee’ was unable to pay the same, entered into a contract” with complainant and her husband “substantially as follows: Hearing that” complainant “was desirous of securing a loan of, to wit, $1,250 on certain lands that she owned in her own right. * * * the said Cannon agreed to make a loan of $1,250 on said lands” to complainant, and the complainant and her husband “agreed to and did execute to Murray Cannon a conveyance” of the lands separately owned by the complainant. The instrument, in copy, is an exhibit to the bill. This instrument of conveyance recites that its consideration is $1,041.48 to the grantors in hand paid, after apt words of conveyance describes the lands mentioned in the bill, and also contains the following provisions: “It is agreed by the said Murray Cannon that he will resell and convey to the said E. L. Gravlee said property at any time prior to January 1, 1915, upon the payment to the said Murray Cannon of the sum of $1,041.48. If said amount is not paid to said Murray Cannon by the 1st day of January, 1915, this agreement becomes null and void.”
The amended bill’s averments characterizing the transaction as in fact a mortgage are these: “ (4) That the said conveyance, under the said agreement, was not to be an absolute deed, but it was understood and agreed' that, upon the payment to said Murray Cannon of said sum of, to wit, $1,048, without interest, which orator owed the said Cannon, by the date specified in said conveyance, that said Murray Cannon would reconvey to oratrix the lands described in the third paragraph of this bill.
“(5) That oratrix has paid off and settled the said debt of, to wit, $1,250, for the money she borrowed from said Cannon and for which she executed to him a mortgage on the other lands as above mentioned, but that the debt of her husband to said Cannon in the sum of $1,048 has not been paid.
[551]*551“(6) Complainant alleges that the said conveyance to said Cannon of the lands described in paragraph 3 of this bill shows on its face that it was not an absolute conveyance, and they allege that the same was really a mortgage on the real estate of oratrix to secure the debt of orator, which he was unable to pay, and that the same is illegal and void.
“(7) Complainants allege that they have never parted with the possession of the land; it being the understanding and agreement that they should retain possession, and pay off the debt of orator, and they are now in the actual and constructive possession of the said lands’.’
The decree sustaining the demurrer is laid in error. It is reversed. The cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
70 So. 719, 195 Ala. 549, 1916 Ala. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gravlee-v-cannon-ala-1916.